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The Heart in Exile
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
6 posts | 2 read | 10 to read
"So effective is the author's treatment . . . that he manages to bring home in a remarkable manner the suffering of the homosexual. . . . It took real courage to write this story, plus a profound insight into human feelings and sensitivities." - Frank G. Slaughter, "New York Times" "A sad, serious first novel called "The Heart in Exile" cannot fairly be ignored. . . . Its detached picture of barren tragic love and desire in a furtive fantastic 'underground' sector of London can arouse no disgust but only a deep pity coupled with a new understanding." - Marghanita Laski, "The Observer" "An extremely important book." - "Truth" "A completely honest story of homosexual life in London. . . . It makes no attempt to defend or condemn. A well-written work." - John Betjeman, "Daily Telegraph" "Written with great competence." - Walter Allen, "New Statesman" Julian Leclerc, a handsome and talented young barrister, has been found dead of an apparent overdose of sleeping pills. The verdict is accidental death, but his fiancee, Ann Hewitt, suspects there's something more to the story. As the grieving woman recounts the details of Julian's tragic end to psychiatrist Dr. Tony Page, he listens with acute interest - but not for the reason she thinks. Years earlier, he and Julian had been lovers, and now, disturbed by the circumstances of his friend's demise, Tony sets out to uncover the truth. His quest will take him from the parties and pubs of the gay underworld of 1950s London to Scotland Yard and the House of Commons as he uses his shrewd and penetrating insight to find who or what was responsible for Julian's death. But he may discover more than he bargained for - about Julian, and himself. . . . First published in 1953, Rodney Garland's noir thriller "The Heart in Exile" is both a groundbreaking classic of gay fiction and the first gay detective story. Long unavailable, Garland's famous novel returns to print at last in this edition, which features a new introduction by Neil Bartlett."
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TheIntrovertedDodoBird
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
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Pickpick

Noir at heart, with the archetypal cynical protagonist and undertones of existential philosophy, The Heart in Exile plays a seminal role in later works, such as Alan Hollinghurst's; The Swimming Pool Library, which similarly explores the underground of British gay life. (1/?)

TheIntrovertedDodoBird Written in 1953, Garland explores the inner dialogue of a bisexual psychiatrist when homosexulity was illegal in England without succumbing to infuriating tropes seen in gay literature, i.e., the protagonist doesn't end up taking his own life or committing murder at the end of the novel. Though the role of suicide does play a large part in the intricate plot, the novel ends with the promise of future happiness and acceptance. (2/?) 7mo
TheIntrovertedDodoBird The attitude towards mental health and grief is, of course, a little antiquated to the modern reader, though Garland's observations into the human psyche were fascinating. There are, also, undertones of the protagonists internalised homophobia which made me, the reader, uncomfortable at times. A gem for anyone interested in gay literature that isn't recommended nearly enough or on the Bestseller list. (3/3) 7mo
Reggie Ohhhi liked this one a lot. Great review. 7mo
TheIntrovertedDodoBird @Reggie It's a fantastic novel! I'll definitely be re-reading it in the future. Thank you! Your review is great, too. 7mo
36 likes4 comments
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Reggie
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
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#promiscuous #heatofjuly This book was written in 1953. It is way ahead of its time. Unfortunately, this author was believed to have killed himself in 1958. There are so many things he says in this book that are relevant today. The pompous guy talking is the MC, who is a therapist helping a woman deal with the suicide of her fiancé who used to be his ex lover. You hate him until the middle of the book where you find out how fallible he is.

DivaDiane I was with him until the last sentence. “The homo...” Hate that term. And then “...than a normal person.” Ugh. I‘m a normal person and it makes me angry. 6y
DivaDiane That said, taken completely out of context, what I wrote above should not be taken necessarily as a criticism of the book, its author or its importance. 6y
Reggie I think it was just the time. Plus gays hadn‘t been cleared by the APA of not being mentally deranged yet, so we weren‘t considered normal back then. @DivaDiane 6y
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Reggie Oh, sorry didn‘t see that last sentence while writing my reply. Lol @DivaDiane 6y
Centique A shocking time in history. 😨 I think I should stack this. I like the sound of finding out how fallible the therapist is. 6y
Reggie @Centique the author does this great thing where he sends his own MC a curveball and it kinda made me as reader feel smug towards him. I thought this book was great. 6y
DivineDiana I can see why you will hate him. 6y
Cinfhen That is a jarring paragraph 😩 6y
68 likes3 stack adds8 comments
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Reggie
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
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(1/3)

kspenmoll ❤️ 7y
Reggie @kspenoll It amazes me that this book was first published in 1953, and saddens me that the author succumbed to suicide in 1959. 7y
Lindy 😞 7y
35 likes3 comments
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Reggie
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
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(2/3)

kspenmoll This book! 7y
30 likes1 comment
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Reggie
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
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(3/3)

review
Reggie
The Heart in Exile | Rodney Garland, Adam De Hegedus
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Pickpick

This novel, published in 1953, is pretty astounding. Tony Page, a psychiatrist, meets his new patient, Ann, who is distraught over the suicide of her fiancé, Julian LeClerc. Tony takes an acute interest in her story because Julian and he were lovers once upon a time. This then becomes a gay detective story that explores the emotional intricacies of leading a hidden life. Even though it was was written in 1953, everything about ??

Reggie it‘s truths still feels relevant 6 decades later. Shoutout to @Centique @sprainedbrain and @Balibee146 for your tags for the cult5 because I searched gay cult books and it led me to this press Valancourt Books which specializes in bringing back gay interest books that were thought to be forgotten. And that‘s how I found this. So thanks!!!!! (edited) 7y
batsy Great review of what sounds like a fascinating book. Have you read Michael Nava? He's on my TBR; it sounds like it might interest you. 7y
Cinfhen Fabulous review ~ sounds fantastic (edited) 7y
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Centique Yay! That‘s serendipity for sure 😍 7y
queerbookreader Wow this sounds super interesting 😱 7y
sprainedbrain I love that the tags helped you find a great book! This one does look really interesting. Stacked. 😃 7y
Suet624 Sounds like a great read! 7y
minkyb Oh wow. This sounds great. Thanks for doing all the work! 7y
51 likes6 stack adds8 comments